Robberies of banks, by depositors seeking access to their own money, are increasingly commonplace as system collapses

Late last month, Sali Hafez walked into a Beirut bank with a fake pistol and demanded a teller hand over $12,000 and the equivalent of £900 in Lebanese currency. On Thursday, the novice bank robber walked from a court to the acclaim of supporters and even to smiles of apparent admiration from court officials and police.

After a fortnight on the run, Hafez had handed herself in a day earlier, in effect throwing herself on the mercy of a court system that was trying to navigate its way through an economic collapse like no other and the disintegration of Lebanese citizens’ pacts with their already fragile state.

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